MLB Reinstates Pete Rose
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MLB's announcement that Pete Rose and others were removed from the permanently ineligible list has the baseball world in a frenzy, many saying Rose should be in the Hall of Fame.
Happy Felsch, a Milwaukee baseball legend in the early 1900s and part of the "Black Sox" scandal, was reinstated to MLB alongside Pete Rose.
As Major League Baseball enters the second quarter of the 2025 season, the Atlanta Braves are looking to turn things around. Heading into Tuesday, the Braves sit at 20-21 and third in the National League East behind the New York Mets (27-15) and Philadelphia Phillies (24-17).
A group of 16 deceased former Major League Baseball players and one owner were removed from the league’s permanent ineligibility list, it was announced on Tuesday. The league changed its policy to allow deceased players,
A two-time American League All-Star who helped the Twins win their first pennant, and later played for the expansion Seattle Pilots/Milwaukee Brewers, has died.
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Yardbarker on MSNMLB makes landmark decision regarding permanent ineligibilityMajor League Baseball issued a statement on a landmark decision Tuesday. Commissioner Rob Manfred had decided that players on the permanently ineligible list will lose that status once they die. This means that players like Pete Rose and Shoeless Joe Jackson are now off the permanently ineligible list, as well as 15 others.
All 30 MLB clubs will continue the tradition of celebrating moms during Mother's Day games on Sunday, while also raising awareness in the ongoing fight against breast cancer. To help commemorate the day,
Hill has a career record of 90-74 with a 4.01 ERA, 1.26 WHIP and 1,428 strikeouts in 1,409 innings. He has only played for three teams for more than one season: Boston (six years), Los Angeles Dodgers (four) and Chicago Cubs (four). The Boston native was a fourth-round pick of the Cubs in 2002 out of Michigan.